I don’t feel like going back and looking for the chapters with the blurred text but one says something about if he’s the sable god he will resent him and the other one says something similar so I don’t think it’s about wanting a peaceful life. I think his family was killed even though they were devout believers in the sable god but like I said earlier the author hasn’t expressly said so we don’t know.
Dude, Doram SAID it was about a peaceful life. On chapter 18. An other proof is when he thought he was dreaming, he asked his husband if, when they would be old enough, they could retire, leave the throne to the next heir and live in a cottage peacefully together. The character said it in the story. Now, he might resent him for that, like you said, but that is an emotion and what I mentioned is why or an actual reason. I don't know what else to tell you, like, I'm quoting the text with the chapter number and you're like "Noooo I don't think so" like... what? Sorry but I will believe the published text over your unprecise memory.
Chapter 18: "To find that your highness is a being from an other world, quite different than I... Well, I'd be sadden and frightened in equal measure. It was always an ordinary life of peace and quiet that appealed to me the most. (...) I daresay that will not ever change or never has it. (...) this is why it pleases me to hear that you are human after all."
Chapter 25: "How wondeful would it be... to build a cottage at the foot of a the mountain... where we share the rest of our days together..?"
I am not angry, I am prodigiously confused by what you are saying. "He doesn't know what he wants"?!?!?! "He doesn't even have his own memory"?!?!?! Dude, what is happening. Are we reading the same story? Are you commenting in the wrong comment section? Doram didn't loose his memory and there is nothing that ever suggested that he doesn't know what he wants, and I would say that considering that he is consistent in multiple chapters about wanting peace and simplicity, he perfeclty knows what he wants. I know what an unreliable narrator is, this is simply not the case here. If I were you, I'd read the story again cause you clearly didn't understand it. And I say this with no disrespect, god knows memory is not reliable, and god knows how easy it is to misinterpret things, which is why I bother to find chapter numbers and quotes. You might think it is a dumb plot but like, I didn't make it. The writer did. That's what he or she wrote. It's okay if you don't like it.
You don’t need to recount the chapters I know them and I’m saying this is unlikely to be the reason he resents him…you’re saying the whole fucking plot has been spoiled in the first18 chapters as well as the (according to your reasoning) completely unnecessary alluding to a deeper reason both before and after everything you’ve mentioned…if you don’t understand reading or writing just say that.
Don't make me say things I didn't say. I never said the whole plot had been spoiled in the first 18 chapters and of course it hasn't, because, thank god, this is not the only element of the story. I am very curious to know what you would consider a "deeper reason"; and I am failing to understand why wanting a peaceful life doesn't seem like it is enough to you. After suffering from being exiled, loosing not only his status and fortune but also his family and everything he had known until then and considering his nature and personality, it makes a lot of sense that Doram would aspire to tranquility and stability. And I don't think that being sad and affraid in the face of the supernatural is lacking depth either. It is a profoundly human reaction, although not very original. I'm sure Doram's character holds many surprises, as it is implied that he is somewhat special (the sable tiger's ability doesn't seem to work on him) but I really don't think there is a big secret reason why Doram would hold a gruge against his husband for being a magic tiger.
Oh and for the record, I am a published author, I studied litterature and comics among other things and was praised for my precision and insight. You could say that I do, in fact, know about reading and writing. But I am always happy to be proven wrong and would love to see proofs of what you suggest through chapter numbers or quotes.

Guys English isn't my first language so please cmiiw but to my understanding doram is so against? disappointed? about the seme being a sable tiger, can someone please tell me the reason ;--; did the author mention it already before or did i miss something ;--;